This new state fund, administered by the Department of Development, provides grants and loans to public entities to help them plan and implement projects to improve efficiency and increase savings through shared services. The LGIF will award up to $100,000 to individual applicants or up to $500,000 for collaborative projects. Multiple awards are available and the first applications are due on March 1, 2012. P3 will assist public organizations in developing LGIF applications, planning shared service projects, and administering LGIF grants.
Latest From P3
Quill interviewed on public sector efficiency & event with Fordham Foundation
Reprinted with permission from Gongwer News Service. Article originally appeared in Gongwer on Friday, October 21, 2011.
Local Government, School Shared Services Discussion Set For Monday
A group of Ohio organizations plan a nonpartisan look at the concept of shared services that one host said Friday he hopes will change perspectives about collaboration.
The event scheduled for Monday will focus on how local governments, schools and higher education institutions can find cost savings through shared services.
Sponsoring the event are the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, the Nord Family Foundation, Ohio Grantmakers Forum, Educational Service Center of Central Ohio, Ohio Education Matters and Public Performance Partners.
“The genesis of this was discussions that I had with Terry Ryan with the Fordham Foundation about the need to talk about and create an event where folks could share productivity and efficiency stories,” Public Performance Partners President and Founder Hugh Quill said in an interview.
“Our focus is really to lead a discussion around how we have to view public capacities differently and not necessarily operate solely within our areas of discipline.”
Mr. Quill, former director of the Ohio Department of Administrative Services, said the government entities should collaborate “to figure out the sweet spots, if you will, where we can save some money in buying things better together.”
Speakers at the three-hour event include, among others, State Auditor Dave Yost and Controlling Board President Randy Cole, who Mr. Quill described as the “tip of the spear for the governor on shared services models.”
Among the possible areas where local entities can realize savings are in combining information technology services, health care, back-office operational and transactional duties, and human resources and payroll services.
“There’s no question that there’s an awful lot of IT capacity out there among a lot of different partners that could be leveraged to assist smaller partners to enhance service and to enhance performance and service for some of those smaller entities,” Mr. Quill said.
One of the speakers, John Weithofer of the Miami Valley Communications Council, created a procurement group of 20 governments that buy things together at a savings for all, Mr. Quill said. “It’s really instructive in terms of kind of how we have to be thinking about how we buy services and commodities in the local government and public space.”
Shared services have been a hot topic at the state level this year as schools and local governments saw state funding reductions. The subject often is tied to the more contentious concept of school district and local government consolidation.
“I think that consolidation is always the toughest conversation, but I think the talking about shared services and looking for ways to work together is a natural stepping stone to that next level, if it’s possible,” Mr. Quill said. “There are all kinds of political obstacles for that, but mainly it’s a sense of community.
“There’s a huge sense of community with schools, no question, and ownership, as there are with local governments, too. I think that that’s the toughest, that’s the nuclear option that we’re dealing with here, but I think that the shared services discussion is the logical first step toward making those conversations more credible and removing some of the barriers.”
Mr. Quill said he hopes the event will start the 150 expected guests – ranging from school superintendents to local government officials – thinking about their entities differently.
“Primarily we want folks to start thinking about public capacities more broadly and not just operating within their comfort zones that have become institutional,” he said. “They need to be thinking about how education space can work with the local government space.
“Also I think that we want folks to start thinking about how difficult and important it is to work on the governance structure. The toughest part of any shared services delivery is making sure all partners are respected and involved in the governance.”
The event will also be rife with success stories. “We want to share some tangible success stories in this space because I think that oftentimes there’s a presumption that these governments have not been sharing, that these schools have not been sharing services and there’s some really significant success stories out there that we should be talking about and modeling,” he said.
“We want folks from all spaces to attend and to contemplate this, county level, city level, township level in addition to local governments. So we expect it to be a pretty significant crowd and one that’s eager to think about the new revenue environment.”
The event is set for 3 to 6 p.m. Monday at the Renaissance Hotel, 50 N. Third St. in Columbus.
Local government and school administrators to learn strategies for sharing services and becoming more efficient
Media Advisory
For Immediate Release Contact: Emmy Partin
October 20, 2011 Phone: 614.439.4836
COLUMBUS – Local officials today are faced with tightening budgets and less direct financial support from state of Ohio government. Will they cut services, raise taxes – or perhaps work together to create efficiencies.
This Monday, October 24, in Columbus, the Thomas B. Fordham Institute – along with the Nord Family Foundation, Ohio Grantmakers Forum, Educational Service Center of Central Ohio, Ohio Education Matters, and Public Performance Partners – will host a free, non-partisan event titled, “Working Smarter Together: Enhancing savings and performance for local schools and governments.”
The event will be held at the Renaissance Hotel, 50 N. Third Street, Columbus from 3 to 6 p.m. Registration is free. To register, call 614-223-1580 or email OhioRSVP@excellence.net. The event is open to the media. Local government, school and higher education administrators are encouraged to attend.
The goal of the event is to help local government administrators – from county commissioners and city managers to school district superintendents – think differently about how they operate, and learn tangible strategies for sharing services and saving money. Featured speakers will include: C. Jackson Grayson, founder of the American Productivity & Quality Center; Dave Yost, Ohio Auditor of State; Randy Cole, Ohio Controlling Board; Hugh Quill, Public Performance Partners; Bart Anderson, Educational Service Center of Central Ohio; Barbara Gellman-Danley, Rio Grande Community College & University of Rio Grande; and John Weithofer, Miami Valley Communications Council.
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State of Ohio Budget – Recent Opinion Roundup
- Op-Ed, Michael Douglas: Talk about runaway spending – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Improved in the Senate, Part I – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Improved in the Senate, Part II – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Path to Collaboration – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Follow the governor – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Choices in the Senate, Part I – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: Choices in the Senate, Part II – Akron Beacon Journal
- Editorial: There’s a better way to pay teachers – Dayton Daily News
- Editorial: Tax breaks are not free – Dayton Daily News
- Op-Ed, Brent Larkin: Tough luck attitude hurts Kasich – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: Gov. Kasich is trying to cut too much from local govs too quickly – The Plain Dealer
- Editorial: Senate tweaking helped Ohio budget, but not enough – The Plain Dealer
- Op-Ed, Michael Morris: YES, budget proposal addresses Ohio’s needs – The Columbus Dispatch
- Op-Ed, Andrea Fejes: NO, budget proposal doesn’t address Ohio’s needs – The Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Don’t miss the chance – The Columbus Dispatch
- Editorial: Columbus’ fiscal follies – The Toledo Blade
State Auditor Dave Yost’s Proposed Toolkit for Local Governments
In testimony before the state of Ohio’s Senate Finance Committee, State Auditor Dave Yost outlines his proposal for providing local governments additional tools for cutting costs and increasing efficiency. Find an excerpt from his testimony below and a link to his full testimony after the excerpt.
Excerpt from Yost testimony, May 16, 2011:
LOCAL GOVERNMENT STABILIZATION TOOLKIT
This is a time for finding new ways of doing public business.
Ohio needs to offer tools to local governments that will help with the hard choices ahead. That’s why I’ve been working on an initiative, called the “Local Government Stabilization Toolkit.” The Toolkit is designed to break down barriers for local government leaders looking for ways to achieve more sustainable futures.
[Read more…] about State Auditor Dave Yost’s Proposed Toolkit for Local Governments
P3 CEO Hugh Quill Op-Ed Published in Plain Dealer
The following article appeared in The Plain Dealer on Sunday, March 13, 2011.
More bang for health care buck
By Hugh Quill
There is strength in numbers. This is an inherent truth in battle, politics and, most importantly, in the marketplace. Volume brings leverage to bear on suppliers and vendors at every level so that margins are tightened through competition.
The next Ohio budget will undoubtedly give motivation to every public entity to seek solutions short of draconian cuts in curriculum and public services, and increases in income taxes, property taxes and tuition. Voters and taxpayers have not lost their patriotic spirit. They have lost their capacity to fund redundantly. It is vitally important that government at every level demonstrate and implement best practices that honor every tax dollar in their current custody.
How can taxpayers get the best bang for their buck? By buying together. Why do vendors sell products a la carte to each public entity? Because it’s profitable, and they can. And since we all instinctively default to and prefer local control, there are plenty of emotional and practical barriers to driving the proper margins for public purchases. But we all pay a huge premium for not acting together, driving down the price and crafting airtight requirements that will hold vendors accountable.
[Read more…] about P3 CEO Hugh Quill Op-Ed Published in Plain Dealer